释义 |
siege
siege S0394400 (sēj)n.1. The surrounding and blockading of a city, town, or fortress by an army attempting to capture it.2. A prolonged period, as of illness: a siege of asthma.3. Obsolete A seat, especially a throne.tr.v. sieged, sieg·ing, sieg·es To subject to a siege; besiege: The invaders sieged the castle. [Middle English sege, from Old French, seat, from Vulgar Latin *sedicum, from *sedicāre, to sit, from Latin sedēre; see sed- in Indo-European roots.]siege (siːdʒ) n1. (Military) a. the offensive operations carried out to capture a fortified place by surrounding it, severing its communications and supply lines, and deploying weapons against itb. (as modifier): siege warfare. 2. a persistent attempt to gain something3. a long tedious period, as of illness, etc4. (Historical Terms) obsolete a seat or throne5. (Military) lay siege to to besiegevb (tr) to besiege or assail[C13: from Old French sege a seat, from Vulgar Latin sēdicāre (unattested) to sit down, from Latin sedēre]siege (sidʒ) n., v. sieged, sieg•ing. n. 1. the act or process of surrounding and attacking a fortified place in such a way as to compel the surrender of the defenders. 2. any prolonged effort to overcome resistance. 3. a series of besetting illnesses or troubles: a siege of head colds. 4. a prolonged period of trouble. 5. Obs. a seat for a person of distinction; throne. v.t. 6. to assail or assault; besiege. Idioms: lay siege to, to besiege. [1175–1225; Middle English sege < Old French: seat, derivative of siegier < Vulgar Latin *sedicāre to set « Latin sedēre to sit] Siege of herons: company of herons, from the way the heron waits for its prey in the shallows at its feet, 1452.Examples: siege of bitterns, 1452; of cranes; of herons, 1452.siege Past participle: sieged Gerund: sieging
Present |
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I siege | you siege | he/she/it sieges | we siege | you siege | they siege |
Preterite |
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I sieged | you sieged | he/she/it sieged | we sieged | you sieged | they sieged |
Present Continuous |
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I am sieging | you are sieging | he/she/it is sieging | we are sieging | you are sieging | they are sieging |
Present Perfect |
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I have sieged | you have sieged | he/she/it has sieged | we have sieged | you have sieged | they have sieged |
Past Continuous |
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I was sieging | you were sieging | he/she/it was sieging | we were sieging | you were sieging | they were sieging |
Past Perfect |
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I had sieged | you had sieged | he/she/it had sieged | we had sieged | you had sieged | they had sieged |
Future |
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I will siege | you will siege | he/she/it will siege | we will siege | you will siege | they will siege |
Future Perfect |
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I will have sieged | you will have sieged | he/she/it will have sieged | we will have sieged | you will have sieged | they will have sieged |
Future Continuous |
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I will be sieging | you will be sieging | he/she/it will be sieging | we will be sieging | you will be sieging | they will be sieging |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been sieging | you have been sieging | he/she/it has been sieging | we have been sieging | you have been sieging | they have been sieging |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been sieging | you will have been sieging | he/she/it will have been sieging | we will have been sieging | you will have been sieging | they will have been sieging |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been sieging | you had been sieging | he/she/it had been sieging | we had been sieging | you had been sieging | they had been sieging |
Conditional |
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I would siege | you would siege | he/she/it would siege | we would siege | you would siege | they would siege |
Past Conditional |
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I would have sieged | you would have sieged | he/she/it would have sieged | we would have sieged | you would have sieged | they would have sieged | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | siege - the action of an armed force that surrounds a fortified place and isolates it while continuing to attackbeleaguering, besieging, military blockadeblockade, encirclement - a war measure that isolates some area of importance to the enemyarmed forces, armed services, military, military machine, war machine - the military forces of a nation; "their military is the largest in the region"; "the military machine is the same one we faced in 1991 but now it is weaker" |
siegenoun blockade, encirclement, besiegement We must do everything possible to lift the siege.siegenoun1. A prolonged surrounding of an objective by hostile troops:beleaguerment, besiegement, blockade, investment.2. An often prolonged period, as of illness:bout.verbTo surround with hostile troops:beleaguer, beset, besiege, blockade, invest.Idiom: lay siege to .Translationssiege (siːdʒ) noun an attempt to capture a fort or town by keeping it surrounded by an armed force until it surrenders. The town is under siege. 包圍 围攻,包围 siege is spelt with -ie- (not -ei-).siege
lay siege toTo surround and attack a place (often a city or building) with armed troops. A: "The army has laid siege to our town!" B: "I knew we should have evacuated sooner!"See also: lay, siegesiege mentalityThe belief that one is constantly under attack and must protect oneself from hostility. Don't be surprised if Ned reacts to you with anger—he has a siege mentality that makes it difficult for him to see anything positively. Many people living in that war-torn country have developed a siege mentality.See also: mentality, siegeunder siege1. Literally, surrounded by the armed forces of the military or police, unable to leave or escape. The city remained under siege for nearly three months. By the time they finally surrendered, their citizens were starved nearly half to death.2. Facing increasing pressure or difficulty. The company's stocks have been under siege as news of the scandal continues to spook investors.3. Subject to criticisms or personal attacks from various different sources or angles. I've been under siege lately, with people from around the company coming to complain about the software issue.See also: siegelay ˈsiege to something surround a building, especially in order to speak to or question the person or people living or working there: The press and paparazzi laid siege to the star’s London flat in the hope of getting a photograph of her.A siege is a military operation in which an army tries to capture a town by surrounding it and stopping the supply of food, etc. to the people inside.See also: lay, siege, somethingunder ˈsiege 1 surrounded by an army or the police: The city has now been under siege for more than three weeks. 2 being criticized all the time or put under pressure by problems, questions, etc: The dollar came under siege on Monday, falling to its lowest for three years.See also: siegesiege
siege, assault against a city or fortress with the purpose of capturing it. The history of siegecraft parallels the development of fortificationfortification, system of defense structures for protection from enemy attacks. Fortification developed along two general lines: permanent sites built in peacetime, and emplacements and obstacles hastily constructed in the field in time of war. ..... Click the link for more information. and, later, artilleryartillery, originally meant any large weaponry (including such ancient engines of war as catapults and battering rams) or war material, but later applied only to heavy firearms as opposed to small arms. ..... Click the link for more information. . In early times battering rams and bores were employed to break down the walls and gates of a fortified place (see castlecastle, type of fortified dwelling characteristic of the Middle Ages. Fortification of towns had been in practice since antiquity, but in the 9th cent. feudal lords began to develop the private fortress-residence known as the castle. ..... Click the link for more information. ) if deception, treachery, starvation, or storm could not carry it. To protect the attackers from missiles, hot oil, and incendiaries launched by the defenders, a shelter was constructed, usually from huge wicker shields covered with wood or hide (mantelets). Mounds and movable wooden towers were built by both besieger and besieged in a race to attain heights from which the adversary could be assailed. Engines of war, such as the catapultcatapult , mechanism used to throw missiles in ancient and medieval warfare. At first, catapults were specifically designed to shoot spears or other missiles at a low trajectory (see bow and arrow). ..... Click the link for more information. , were brought into play by both sides to hurl stones, spears, pots of fire, and arrows. It was also common for besiegers to build a wall (circumvallation) around their objective to prevent sorties and a second wall (contravallation) around their own army as security against relieving forces. Mining was employed by the assailants from earliest times, and the besieged dug countermines in defense; such tactics greatly increased in effectiveness with the introduction of gunpowder. Artillery that could breach high walls made it necessary to lower and extend medieval fortifications and mount defensive artillery. Many sieges became artillery duels. The development of tanks, aircraft, and missiles in the 20th cent. has given the besieger a great advantage in firepower and mobility. The starvation of civilians as a siege tactic is now banned under the Geneva Conventions. Some notable sieges of history include those of Syracuse (415–413 B.C.), Jerusalem (A.D. 70), Acre (1189–90), Constantinople (1453), Quebec (1759–60), Sevastopol (1854–55, 1941–42), Vicksburg (1863), Port Arthur (1904), Malta (1940–43), Leningrad (1941–43), Dienbienphu (1954), Khe Sanh (1968), and Sarajevo (1992–96). Bibliography See C. W. C. Oman, Art of War in the Middle Ages (2d ed. 1924, repr. 1959); S. Toy, A History of Fortification from 3000 B.C. to A.D. 1700 (2d ed. 1966); V. Melegari, The Great Military Sieges (1972); I. V. Hogg, Fortress (1975); C. Duffy, Siege Warfare (2 vol., 1979–85). Siege a method of combat for capturing a fortress or other fortification. The siege was used from very ancient times when a city or fortress could not be taken by sudden attack or by storm. A siege consisted of encircling the fortress with troops, building around it siege fortifications (called lines of countervallation and circum-vallation), setting up fortified camps, establishing a blockade, and, if necessary, mounting a gradual or accelerated attack that usually ended in a storm. Part of the forces of the besieging troops protected the siege fortifications, preventing sorties of the besieged and enemy attacks from without, while the main forces conducted the actual siege. Sometimes, after establishing the blockade, the besiegers waited for the besieged to run out of ammunition and surrender. Such a siege could last months or even years. To approach the walls of the fortress, the besiegers used enclosed movable galleries, called vineae, and, after the invention of firearms, open-ground approaches, parallels, saps, and other earthen structures, as well as underground passages to penetrate the fortress or destroy a section of its walls. In a gradual attack, the besiegers tried to destroy the walls with battering rams, windlasses, hooks, and throwing engines (such as catapults and ballistae), as well as siege towers (helepoles), ladders, and fascines. With the appearance of gunpowder and the development of artillery, buried land mines and artillery bombardment were used to breach the walls of the fortress. Siege artillery came into use in the 17th century (in Russia in the early 18th century). In the 17th century the French military engineer A. Deville and later the Marquis de Vauban systematized and improved the methods for the gradual attack on fortresses. The methods remained essentially unchanged until the early 20th century. In the 18th through early 20th centuries, siege armies were created to besiege fortresses. Such armies were formed by the Japanese at Port Arthur in 1904 and the Germans and Russians in World War I (1914–18) for the siege of Liege, Namur, Mau-beuge, and Przemyśl. The term “siege” went out of use after World War I. bankerThe bench or table upon which bricklayers and stonemasons prepare and shape their material.MedicalSeebankerFinancialSeeBankerSIEGE
Acronym | Definition |
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SIEGE➣Smoking Induced Epithelial Gene Expression (database) |
siege
Synonyms for siegenoun blockadeSynonyms- blockade
- encirclement
- besiegement
Synonyms for siegenoun a prolonged surrounding of an objective by hostile troopsSynonyms- beleaguerment
- besiegement
- blockade
- investment
noun an often prolonged period, as of illnessSynonymsverb to surround with hostile troopsSynonyms- beleaguer
- beset
- besiege
- blockade
- invest
Synonyms for siegenoun the action of an armed force that surrounds a fortified place and isolates it while continuing to attackSynonyms- beleaguering
- besieging
- military blockade
Related Words- blockade
- encirclement
- armed forces
- armed services
- military
- military machine
- war machine
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